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Community Based Virus Load Differentiated Care in Rural Africa
A randomized, open label trial of two strategies for Virus Load Differentiated Care (VLDC) monitoring of virologic outcome in a rural community based treatment program in Zimbabwe.
This is an open label randomized trial among HIV infected children and adolescents and young adults receiving ART at 8 treatment outreach sites near their homes provided by Chidamoyo Mission Hospital. The investigators will implement virus load (VL) testing at "near point of care" using either the GeneXpert Quant or the SAMBA to evaluate the safety, clinical and virologic outcomes of near POC monitoring of virus load at the Chidamoyo Christian Hospital in Mashonaland West Zimbabwe. The investigators hypothesize that our proposed package of care will result in a decrease in virologic failure, increase virologic suppression and prevent drug resistance in this key population in a rural ART treatment program. Process and cost data will be collected for subsequent cost-analysis. HIV infected children and adolescents on ART will be randomized (1:1) to either SOC (300) or a near POC VLDC monitoring. SOC VL is performed by Roche COBAS at the Provincial Hospital Chinhoyi and the results returned to the hospital within 4 weeks. Those randomized to near POC will be tested with the Cepheid GeneXpert assay and results are available within 3 days. Follow-up repeat testing for HIV RNA \> 1,000 copies/ml is offered using the same virologic monitoring system at the next drug/clinic visit within 3 months. The hypothesis is that viral load monitoring and potentially genotyping to sustain suppression to \< 1,000 copies/ml will reduce treatment failure to \< 15%. Secondary endpoints include the rate of drug switching and the evaluation and prevention of drug resistance. The study will enroll up to 600 children (3 -10) years and adolescents (11-21) years, providing data that will guide strategies for management of children and adolescents who are surviving on ART. Primary Objective: To determine if implementation of point of care virus load differentiated care (POC virus load), targeted genotyping and mHealth tools will result in improved virologic suppression among children and adolescents (\<21years) on ART. Sample size: The primary study endpoint is viral load suppression at 48 weeks among PLWHA \< 21 years old, using VLDC implemented as near POC compared to SOC semi- annual virus load testing. The investigators will enroll young PLWHA from eight communities and the Chidamoyo Hospital Clinic as a rolling prospective cohort. The investigators hypothesize that an intervention package of digitized data, local immediate POC Virus load and genotype will result in \> 90% virologic suppression after 1 year. The estimated minimum sample size to detect at least a 15% increase in virologic suppression with 90% power, at significance level α=0.05 assuming 10% loss to follow up rate (LTFU) rate is 356 PLWHA on ART. Secondary endpoints: 1. rate of switching from 1st to 2nd line. 2. frequency of Drug Resistance Mutations (DRM) among 1st and 2nd line virologic failures. 3. the frequency of Hepatitis B virus infection (HBSag). In collaboration with Ben Gurion University Global Health, the investigators will perform an ethnographic survey over the course of the primary study. The objective is to develop formative research to understand the individual and community variation in suppression rate and drug switching including differences in virologic failure and adherence by age, gender, rural outreach site, orphan-hood/caregiver and socio-economic status.
Age
2 - 26 years
Sex
ALL
Healthy Volunteers
No
Chidamoyo Christian Hospital
Karoi, Mashonaland West, Zimbabwe
Start Date
February 1, 2018
Primary Completion Date
June 15, 2020
Completion Date
November 15, 2020
Last Updated
November 17, 2020
451
ACTUAL participants
Monitoring virus load
DIAGNOSTIC_TEST
Lead Sponsor
Biomedical Research and Training Institute, Zimbabwe
Collaborators
NCT01422694
NCT06066138
Data Source & Attribution
This clinical trial information is sourced from ClinicalTrials.gov, a service of the U.S. National Institutes of Health.
Modifications: This data has been reformatted for display purposes. Eligibility criteria have been parsed into inclusion/exclusion sections. Location data has been geocoded to enable distance-based search. For the authoritative and most current information, please visit ClinicalTrials.gov.
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View ClinicalTrials.gov Terms and ConditionsNCT06647069